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How alcohol affects your body
1. How alcohol affects your
body
Drinking alcohol affects the body in many
ways. These effects can lead to physical and
mental changes that can put alcohol users and
others at risk of injury or death. Possible
dangers include falls, household accidents, and
car crashes.
2. When a person drinks beer, wine, or another alcoholic
drink, the alcohol is quickly absorbed in the blood and
then carried throughout the body. A drink of alcohol
stays in the body for about 2 hours after being
consumed. This period of time can vary depending on
the person's weight, gender, and other factors. When a
person drinks, the concentration of alcohol in the blood
3. The small intestine and the stomach absorb most of
the alcohol after drinking. A small amount leaves the
body through breath and urine. Eating food, especially
fatty food, slows the absorption of alcohol. If people
drink more alcohol than their bodies can absorb, they
become drunk.
4. How Alcohol Affects the Liver, Brain, and Heart
Drinking too much alcohol affects many parts of the body.
It can be especially harmful to the liver, the organ that
metabolizes (breaks down) alcohol and other harmful
substances. People who drink heavily for a long time can
develop diseases such as liver inflammation (alcoholic
hepatitis) or severe liver scarring (cirrhosis). Alcohol-
5. Alcohol not broken down by the liver goes to the rest of
the body, including the brain. Alcohol can affect parts of
the brain that control movement, speech, judgment, and
memory. These effects lead to the familiar signs of
drunkenness: difficulty walking, slurred speech, memory
lapses, and impulsive behavior. Long-term heavy drinking
can shrink the frontal lobes of the brain, which impairs
6.
7. Drinking alcohol can affect the heart in good and bad
ways. On one hand, studies have shown that moderate
drinking -- up to two drinks a day for men and one drink
for women -- can lower the chances of developing heart
disease. On the other hand, heavy drinking -- either all
at once or over time -- can damage the heart. Longterm alcohol use can also result in high blood
pressure, which increases a person's risk of heart
8. Male and Female Drinkers Compared
Alcohol affects men and women differently. In general,
older men are more likely to drink alcohol compared with
older women. But women of all ages are often more
sensitive than men to the effects of alcohol. Women's
bodies tend to break alcohol down more slowly. Also,
women have less water in their bodies than men, so
alcohol becomes more concentrated. As a result, women
9. Drinking for a long time is more likely to damage a
woman's health than a man's health. Research
suggests that as little as one drink per day can
slightly raise the risk of breast cancers in some
women, especially those who have been through